M.E. Fields and J.R. Fields v. General Motors Corporation

121 F.3d 271, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 19267, 1997 WL 416528
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 24, 1997
Docket96-2913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 121 F.3d 271 (M.E. Fields and J.R. Fields v. General Motors Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M.E. Fields and J.R. Fields v. General Motors Corporation, 121 F.3d 271, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 19267, 1997 WL 416528 (7th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

For fourteen years, from 1971 to 1985, John and Earl Fields, as Fields Cadillac, Inc., owned and operated a Cadillac dealership in Evanston, Illinois. In the early 1980s Cadillacs experienced a temporary decline in popularity, resulting in an “overdealered” market in the Chicago area. The Fields’ dealership sold many fewer cars than previously and was losing money. After considering the options available to them, the Fields decided to give up voluntarily Fields Cadillac’s Dealer Sales and Service Agreements with General Motors Corporation (GM). This decision, the Fields now say, was reached only because of an oral contract between the Fields and GM. In that oral contract, according to the Fields, GM promised to give them the next available Cadillac-only dealership in the Chicago area or in Florida. Since the parties now find themselves in federal court, it will come as no surprise that GM denies ever making such a promise, asserting instead that GM promised only to consider the Fields for another suitable Cadillac dealership. After discovery was completed, the district court entered summary judgment for GM. We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, and affirm only if there is no material issue of fact. See Anderson v. Baxter Healthcare Corp., 13 F.3d 1120, 1122 (7th Cir.1994). We find none, and affirm.

The only memorialized version of the alleged agreement, made at the time, supports GM’s version of the agreement:

Cadillac [GM] will give consideration to the applications of Messrs. M.E. [Earl] Fields and J.R. [John] Fields as candidates for a Cadillac dealership that may become available in an area of mutual interest. Cadillac cannot guarantee that the very next available point would be granted to either party. However, Cadillac will consider both parties as being preferred candidates for available points which match their qualifications.

March 25, 1985 letter from C.E. Hendrix, Regional Manager at GM, to M.E. Fields. The Fields assert that, regardless of this memorializing language, they had an oral contract with GM, which provided for GM to give the Fields the next available Cadillac dealership in the Chicago area or Florida. Despite the alleged contract, GM, in 1986, assigned a new Cadillac dealership in Port Richey, Florida to a party other than the Fields. The Fields believed at the time that the assignment of this dealership to someone other than themselves was a violation of their agreement; yet, they say, they accepted GM’s proffered excuse as legitimate, and allowed GM to delay the performance of the agreement.

In 1988 GM again breached the alleged agreement. This time, a dealership in Jupiter, Florida was given to another party. The Fields again believed that this action by GM was a violation of their agreement, and again accepted GM’s proffered reason as understandable. The Fields believed that the essential agreement remained in force, even if delayed, and took no legal actions to enforce it at that time.

By June of 1992 and still without a new dealership, the Fields had had enough. They 1 sent a demand letter to GM requesting compensation for the goodwill or “blue sky” value of the Evanston Cadillac dealership, which they had given up, since GM had not fulfilled its obligation under the alleged agreement to provide them with a new deal *274 ership. GM wrote back on June 9, 1992, denying the existence of any agreement beyond what was plainly stated in the March 25, 1985 letter quoted earlier. On June 8, 1994, the Fields brought this lawsuit against GM, arguing (1) that the parties had a binding agreement to give the Fields the next available Cadillac dealership in the Chicago area or Florida, (2) that GM breached the agreement with the June 9, 1992 letter disavowing the agreement and (3) that equitable estoppel and promissory estoppel compelled enforcement of the agreement. The district court found that, assuming there was a contract, it had been breached at the latest in 1988, that consequently the statute of limitations had run and, further, that neither equitable estoppel nor promissory estoppel applied to this ease.

The Fields and GM disagree about the purported existence of a contract promising the next available Cadillac dealership in Florida or the Chicago area to the Fields in exchange for the Fields’ giving up their Evanston dealership. 2 But we believe that, even if the contract had come into existence exactly as the Fields assert, they still would not have a viable claim. Hence, we need not reach the issue of the contract’s existence. For purposes of discussion, we will assume the existence of an agreement, entered into in 1985, promising the Fields the next available Cadillac dealership in Florida or in the Chicago area.

1. Statute of Limitations

This lawsuit was filed on June 8,1994. The relevant statute of limitations is either four years under the Illinois UCC, 810 ILCS 5/2-725, or five years under the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure, 735 ILCS 5/13-205. Thus, unless GM breached the assumed agreement on or after June 8, 1989, the statute of limitations has run. It is undisputed that, when GM gave the Port Richey and Jupiter dealerships to other dealers, the Fields believed these arrangements to be in breach of the agreement. Thus, with respect to the Port Richey site, Earl Fields said in his deposition: “I felt that they didn’t live up to their obligations, but they persuaded me that they had no alternative.” M.E. Fields Depo. at 327. And in response to the question whether GM broke its promise when it awarded the Jupiter dealership to another, Earl said “[y]es.” Id. at 360. It therefore appears that GM breached the alleged agreement, at the latest, in 1988. Thus, the statute of limitations has run.

The Fields argue that, while GM failed to fulfill its obligations with respect to the Port Richey and Jupiter locations, GM had not yet breached the agreement, or, if there had been a breach, it was waived. Instead of a breach, the Fields contend that GM and the Fields agreed to a delay in performance. The essence of the agreement, according to the Fields, was their resignation of the Fields Cadillac dealership in Evanston (instead of a sale) in return for a new Cadillac dealership. This obligation to award a dealership stood, they say, even if the timing condition was waived. The Fields support this argument by pointing to actions on the part of GM that evidence a continued intent to award the Fields a Cadillac dealership. For example, in the spring of 1987 the Fields met with a high-ranking GM officer who promised to notify the Fields of any open locations. And in July, 1988, GM offered the Fields a Gaithersburg, Maryland dealership (which they declined). The Fields also look to the testimony of John Connelly, Director of Dealer Development for GM during the years 1974 to 1987. Connelly testified in his deposition that:

The intent of [the March 25, 1985 letter] was that if a point became available which would have been satisfactory to the Fields *275

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121 F.3d 271, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 19267, 1997 WL 416528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/me-fields-and-jr-fields-v-general-motors-corporation-ca7-1997.